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NEW: Get a British Airways First Class meal kit delivered to your door – we try it out

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British Airways is jumping onto the premium meal kit trend and offering you the opportunity to order its First Class meals to assemble at home.

From today, you will be able to order your own BA First recipe box from Feast Box. Each meal kit consists of four courses for two and costs between £80 and £100.

Even better, every box comes with a unique voucher to save 10% off your next British Airways flight if you book before 21st May. A minimum spend of £200 is required.

British Airways Feast Box First Class meal kit

You can order here.

Whilst this was not explained to us by BA, it appears that ordering signs you up to the Feast Box subscription meal service. You would need to cancel this to avoid receiving further, non BA, meal boxes automatically.

If you are in the first 500 people to order, you will also get a full size bottle of Hattingley Valley English sparkling wine thrown in for free. This is made exclusively for British Airways to serve in First. (EDIT 10pm: This limit now appears to have been reached, so if you order now you are unlikely to get the wine.)

British Airways Feast Box First Class meal kit beef cheek

What’s on the menu?

The meals have been developed by British Airways and DO&CO and you can choose between veggie, pescy or carnivorous options. Here is the sort of thing you can expect to receive:

Loch Fyne smoked salmon timbale with honey mustard dressing

Slow cooked British beef cheeks with Jalapeno potato gratin, tenderstem broccoli and chimichurri

Cheese selection of Caws Golden cenarth, Snowdonia Black Bomber Cheddar, Harrogate blue and Kidderton ash goats cheese with chutney

Dark chocolate & orange liqueur bread & butter pudding with vanilla sauce

The meal kits will be assembled in DO&CO’s massive new kitchens at Heathrow, which have presumably been fairly quiet for the past year. DO&CO will prepare the boxes freshly each day to order.

British Airways Feast Box First Class meal kit 2

BA offered to send us a sample box. With Sinead at home with her new born baby, we thought she would appreciate a treat.

The sharp-eyed will notice that Sinead is using First Class BA crockery. This is NOT included with the meal kit, but was sent with our press sample to give the pictures a more First Class feel.

Over to Sinead:

Sinead’s taste test

With dinners in our house consisting of ready meals, takeaways and a lot of toast over the last few weeks, I was more than a little excited to sample a luxury four-course meal.

British Airways Feast Box First Class meal kit

As the First Class meal box has been developed with Feast Box, BA has been able to benefit from Feast Box’s established processes, such as timely text updates about delivery and efficient packaging.

British Airways Feast Box First Class meal kit

Inside the box felt much more familiar, with packaging and cartons very similar to those onboard a British Airways flight.

A menu card is provided that lists all ingredients provided in the box and is a guide to assembling the four courses. Unsurprisingly for a four course meal, there were a lot of ingredients. The box even goes as far as providing olive oil, and salt and pepper, meaning you could create this meal perfectly without a single thing in your cupboards.

British Airways Feast Box First Class meal kit

I was impressed by the lengths that had been taken to make all packaging recyclable. The main box had an innovative design that meant it required no plastic tape. All cartons and interior packaging were made from recyclable card.

The menu

I opted for the vegetarian meal which was:

British Airways Feast Box First Class meal kit

Wholegrain salad with asparagus, grilled aubergine and flamed peppers, hummus creme fraiche, followed by ….

British Airways Feast Box First Class meal kit

Handmade angnolotti, morels, pan-fried asparagus, panna sauce, followed by ….

British Airways Feast Box First Class meal kit

Golden cenarth, black bomber, harrogate blue, and kidderton ash cheeses, followed by ….

British Airways Feast Box First Class meal kit

Dark chocolate and orange liqueur bread and butter pudding with vanilla sauce

Making a meal of it

Whilst the recipe wasn’t hugely technical, this is not one of the recipe boxes that simply require you to put everything in the oven for 30 minutes.

Although some elements like the dessert just required warming, there was quite a bit of preparation required, such as cooking the quinoa for the wholegrain salad, grilling aubergines, roasting peppers and so on.

The full cooking time required was stated as 55 minutes. This seemed about right, although we took considerably longer thanks to the demands of a new born baby interrupting our flow.

The recipe provided gave very clear instructions and includes details on presenting the dishes to the same standard as the First Class cabin. Everything was provided to recreate the First Class experience from mint leaf garnishes for the dessert to a mini bunch of grapes to have with the cheese.

Whilst the recipe was straightforward to follow, our one criticism would be that it was tricky to get the timing right. The guide suggests that you get both the starter and main ready then serve, but this would have resulted in some rather cold pasta. We decided against this and cooked the pasta after we ate the starter.

In conclusion

Timing challenges aside, it really was a delicious meal. The ingredients were excellent quality, and the recipe resulted in a very indulgent four-course experience.

As the boxes are prepared each day, the menu felt seasonally reflective and the vegetables were very fresh. I very much enjoyed all courses but the main was a bit of a showstopper – a rich creamy sauce over flavoursome filled pasta alongside asparagus and morels.

The Hattingley Valley English sparkling wine – included for free with the first 500 boxes ordered – was also lovely, and a particularly good companion to the salad starter.

At £80 to £100, the boxes is not cheap but the portions are very large (I’ll be eating leftover wholegrain salad for several lunches) and it really felt like the closest I’ve come to a luxury meal since restaurants closed.

You will also receive a voucher for 10% off your next British Airways flight if you book by 21st May. If you know you will use this, it makes the box even better value.

If you have a special occasion coming up whilst we are still in lockdown, it is well worth considering the BA First Class Feast Box as a way to celebrate in First Class style.

You can find out more on the Feast Box website here.


How to earn Avios from UK credit cards

How to earn Avios from UK credit cards (April 2024)

As a reminder, there are various ways of earning Avios points from UK credit cards.  Many cards also have generous sign-up bonuses!

In February 2022, Barclaycard launched two exciting new Barclaycard Avios Mastercard cards with a bonus of up to 25,000 Avios. You can apply here.

You qualify for the bonus on these cards even if you have a British Airways American Express card:

Barclaycard Avios Plus card

Barclaycard Avios Plus Mastercard

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Barclaycard Avios card

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There are two official British Airways American Express cards with attractive sign-up bonuses:

British Airways American Express Premium Plus

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British Airways American Express

5,000 Avios for signing up and an Economy 2-4-1 voucher for spending £15,000 Read our full review

You can also get generous sign-up bonuses by applying for American Express cards which earn Membership Rewards points. These points convert at 1:1 into Avios.

American Express Preferred Rewards Gold

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We recommend Capital on Tap for limited companies. You earn 1 Avios per £1 which is impressive for a Visa card, along with a sign-up bonus worth 10,500 Avios.

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You should also consider the British Airways Accelerating Business credit card. This is open to sole traders as well as limited companies and has a 30,000 Avios sign-up bonus.

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Comments (152)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Andrew says:

    It’s a shame the bottle of sparkling isn’t guaranteed before you order – how would we even know if they send these out to anyone, with everyone being told they weren’t one of the “lucky 500”.

    • Rob says:

      I think you have to assume you get it whilst the website still shows it.

  • Dirtyneedlebluesky says:

    Wow!

    Quote concerned about the author’s eating habits if they are able to feed off the salad for several lunches (ok we don’t see the quantity that arrived but that sounds like a stretch).

  • Prince Charles says:

    Interesting concept but way too over-priced.

  • Jords says:

    At least now we know the value BA place on a First Class meal for avios compensation 🙂

  • SammyJ says:

    Very interested to know more about the voucher – is it for one single person’s flight, or can it be used for a family? If it’s 10% off the total cost, then as a family of 4 we could be saving between £150-300 on flights for next Easter, and the food box would just be a bonus!

    • meta says:

      Minimum spend is £200. So you need to book £2000 worth of flights just to get the cost back.

      • SammyJ says:

        If you spent the min spend of £200 and got 10% back, you’d be getting £20 off surely? If we spent £2000 on flights then we’d get £200 back (less the £80 cost of the food), so well over break-even, unless I’m misunderstanding something?

    • Andrew says:

      I would imagine it’s 10% of the base fare per booking – so can be for more than one person. For a meal kit designed for 2, it would be odd to make the discount for a solo traveller.

      • SammyJ says:

        You’d hope so! Would hate to waste £80 and find the voucher effectively useless though!

    • Rob says:

      BA never even told us there was a voucher. First I knew was when the Feast Box site went live late last night, with no small print.

  • Matt says:

    This is priced similar to the Michelin star chef boxes i.e. L’enclune and Tommy Banks. Why go for BA over the top UK restaurants? I can personally vouch for the Tommy Banks food boxes which are fabulous.

  • Mike says:

    With a “first available delivery date of April 1st” – this is an April Fool surely !

  • Chris Heyes says:

    Rob, Rhys least you could have done to make it a real treat for Sinead is offered to cook it for them.
    Or Rob you could have just sent Rhys round as nobody knows if Rhys is Rhys or Rob is Rob especially if a Hotel stay is involved
    Rob have you ever stayed as someone else ? Rhys maybe ? lol

    • Rob says:

      I think covid rules still prevent us from heading to South London to cook a meal – and anything I cooked, you wouldn’t want, frankly.

      Hotels – over the years we have done literally everything. I have stayed as others, others have stayed as me, people have pretended to be my wife etc. Issues:

      * a massive problem in Spain when I booked off my Mum’s IHG account to trigger a bonus. Despite my name being on the booking as 2nd guest and the same surname, Spanish law seems to insist that the first named guest check-in in person. Got away with it in the end. (Oddly, a couple of years later, I booked Anika in the Westin Madrid with, obviously, a non-matching surname and me as 2nd guest and it was totally fine.)

      * I paid for a one-night HIX stay for a friend who needed one, because it would trigger an IHG bonus worth more than the stay cost. The hotel realised he was not me from the name on the credit card (which is stored even if you use contactless and the staff never see it) and the stay credited as ineligible. This is correct under IHG rules.

      In general, it seems easier when a woman checks in as a male, irrespective of surname match, and says the male is turning up later.

      The fight Rhys had with the Luton Courtyard is just bizarre and I’ve no idea why they were so keen on ID.

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